Sandwich Manufacturing Co. v. Max

24 L.R.A. 524, 58 N.W. 14, 5 S.D. 125, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 34
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 24 L.R.A. 524 (Sandwich Manufacturing Co. v. Max) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sandwich Manufacturing Co. v. Max, 24 L.R.A. 524, 58 N.W. 14, 5 S.D. 125, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 34 (S.D. 1894).

Opinion

Kellam, J.

We think the following statement at the head of appellants’ brief is a fair presentation of the facts in this case, and we adopt it as the basis of this opinion: “On or about April 15, A. D. 1892, defendants Max & Baisch were a copartnership engaged in the retail hardware business and the selling of farm machinery at Scotland, this state. Their stock of goods, book accounts, and all their other property in which they had a valuable interest or any substantia] equity as a partnership or individuals were of the nominal value of ten ($10,-000) thousand dollars, the cash value of which was $7,000 to $8,000. Their indebtedness exceeded fifteen thousand ($15,000) dollars. Among their creditors were the respondents Solomon and J. C. Wenzlaff, of Yankton, this state, to whom they owed seven thousand ($7,000) dollars. The said Wenzlaffs knew that Max & Baisch were hopelessly insolvent on or about said last named date. The said Max & Baisch, knowing that they could not continue their business longer, and that they must abandon the same, executed a bill of sale and deed of their said stock and book accounts, and all their other property in which they [128]*128had any substantial interest or equity, either as a partnership or individuals, to the respondents Wenzlaff, in payment of their indebtedness of seven thousand ($7,000) dollars. Immediately on the delivery of said bill of sale and deed, the said Wenzlaffs took possession of all the property so transferred, and have continued to operate the store and run the same in their own names since. Said transfer of Max & Baisch left them without any property or means with which to satisfy or pay their indebtedness to any of their other creditors. This action was in stituted by the plaintiffs, for themselves and all other creditors of Max & Blaisch, for the purpose of having said deed and bill of sale and transfer declared an assignment with intent to give said Wenzlaffs preference in the collection of their debts over the other creditors of Max & Baisch, and that it created a trust for the benefit-of all the creditors of said Max & Baisch, under the provisions of Section 4660 of the Compiled Laws of the state of South Dakota. No appearance was entered for Max & Baisch, but their codefendants, vendees of said property, filed a general demurrer to the complaintherein, setting up that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against them. The demurrer was submitted to the court and the same sustained.” The plaintiffs appealed.

From this statement we draw the following facts: Max & Baisch were justly indebted to the Wenzlaffs in the sum of $7,000. In payment of such indebtedness they conveyed to them property whose cash value was $7,000 to 8,000. The property so conveyed constituted substantially their entire means, and resulted, as they knew it wouid, in the dissolution and discontinuance of their business. The Wenzlaffs knew that such conveyance and payment to them took and absorbed substantially all the property of Max & Baisch, and that it would necessitate the abandonment of their business. Max & Baisch were at the time largely indebted to other creditors, including the plaintiffs in this action, who were left, by such conveyance and payment to the Wenzlaffs, entirely unprovided for. The question to be [129]*129determined is directly this: Is it the legal effect of these facts to make such conveyance to the Wenzlaffs an assignment by Max & Baisch for the benefit of their creditors? At common law, a debtor in failing circumstances may use any or all of his property to pay one or more creditors in preference to others. 2 Kent, Comm. 532; Burrill, Assignm., § 160. In this state this right of the debtor is expressly declared by statute. 1 ‘A debtor may pay one creditor in preference to another, or may give one creditor security for the payment of his demand in preference to another.” Comp. Laws, § 4654. This provision simply codifies the common law, and, unless qualified by other statutory provisions, the right of a debtor to select and prefer one creditor to another remains as at common law. And it is very clear that Max & Baisch, in making such payment to the Wenzlaffs, were exercising a right recognized and assured to them both by the common and statutory laws, unless such right has been limited or restrained by other provisions of the statute; and this is what is claimed by appellants is done by the statute regulating assignments in trust by insolvent debtors for the benefit of their creditors. Section 4660, Comp. Laws, is as follows: “An insolvent debtor may, in good faith, execute an assignment of property to one or more assignees, in trust towards the satisfaction of his creditors, in conformity to the provisions of this title; subject, however to the provisions of this code relative to trusts and to fraudulent transfers, and i¿he restrictions imposed by. law upon an assignment by special partnerships, by corporations or by other specified classes of persons; provided, moreover, that such assignment shall not be valid if it be upon, or contain any trust or condition by which any creditor is to receive a preference or priority over any other creditor; but in such case the property of the insolvent shall become a trust fund to be administered in equity, in the district court, and shall inure to the benefit of all the creditors in proportion to their respective claims or demands.” Unen[130]*130lightened and uninfluenced by several judicial decisions, some of which it will be necessary to notice hereafter, I think I should understand these provisions, — the one declaring the right of a debtor to prefer particular creditors, and the- other regulating the making and declaring the effect of a general assignment in trust for the benefit of all creditors — to be distinct and independent provisions, either of which was available to a debtor. That two different courses were open to every debtor, he might, as provided in said Section 4654, use any or all his property to pay or secure any creditor in preference to others, or he might, as provided in said Section 4660, turn over all his property to a trustee for the benefit of all his creditors ratably. If he chooses to adopt the former course of paying or securing a preferred creditor, he must keep himself and the transaction within the rules of honesty and good faith as defined by the law. If he adopts the latter course of making a general assignment, he must follow the requirements of the statute authorizing and regulating such assignment; and, if in or by such assignment he undertakes to prefer one creditor to another, the consequence prescribed by such statute will follow. That the question is not one of morals, to be measured by the conscience of the court, but of law, to be tested by the enactments of the legislature.

These views, thus generally expressed, are plainly opposed by the opinion of the territorial supreme court in Straw v. Jenks, 6 Dak. 414, 43 N. W. 941. It is quite probable that the opinion of the learned judge, which was elaborate and instructive, laid down some propositions not necessary to a decision of that case upon the facts presentedj and that the law which might perhaps have properly decided that case does not necessarily decide this. In that case the mortgagors made several chattel mortgages, at practically the same time, to as many different creditors. They were all immediately placed in the hands of an agent or trustee for enforcement. These acts were all so nearly simultaneous, and so closely related to each other [131]

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Bluebook (online)
24 L.R.A. 524, 58 N.W. 14, 5 S.D. 125, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sandwich-manufacturing-co-v-max-sd-1894.